frame serving with jitter

hi list, i have been using avisynth for some time now. for those on windowz
with any intrest in video i highly recommand taking a look at it.
its a scripting language for video post processing.
for example a script which does resizing, you write in notepad and can run
on any mediaplayer.

AVISource("somevideo.avi")

# resize the dimensions of the video frame to 320×240
LanczosResize(320, 240)

but its most powerfull feture is it is capable of frame serving.
question is there a way to make it work with jitter. or any other
frame server which is qt compatible.

I would love to know if this is possible. This could be a great
solution for moving data between apps, like a local loopback but for
video.

On Mar 22, 2007, at 7:33 PM, yair reshef wrote:

> hi list, i have been using avisynth for some time now. for those on
> windowz with any intrest in video i highly recommand taking a look
> at it.
> its a scripting language for video post processing.
> for example a script which does resizing, you write in notepad and
> can run on any mediaplayer.
>
> AVISource("somevideo.avi")
>
> # resize the dimensions of the video frame to 320×240
> LanczosResize(320, 240)
>
>
> but its most powerfull feture is it is capable of frame serving.
>
> question is there a way to make it work with jitter. or any other
> frame server which is qt compatible.
>
>

Hrm. Well, the pipes that are used in things like ffmpeg and other
script wrappers for video transcoding solutions never touch the disk.
But yes, that is a totally valid technique with respect to jitter. I
suppose I should have stated in my question without hitting the
drive :P There may be a way to open some pipe into java for doing
this. Oh, if I had time :)

On Mar 22, 2007, at 11:53 PM, Joshua Kit Clayton wrote:

>
> On Mar 22, 2007, at 3:08 PM, vade wrote:
>
>> I would love to know if this is possible. This could be a great
>> solution for moving data between apps, like a local loopback but
>> for video.
>
> Save to disk, execute commandline, read back in. Should be easy to
> make an mxj example (pending the 4.6.3 Max release which fixes
> commandline calls on MacTel, that is).
>
> See main list and mxj threads for calling commandline functions
> from mxj (or with the shell and other externals avail for this
> purpose).
>
> -Joshua